[Two-dimensional echocardiographic and left ventriculographic evaluations of left ventricular diverticula].

1989 
: Twenty cases of left ventricular diverticula were gleaned from 4,300 consecutive angiocardiographic records (13 males and seven females whose age ranged from 17 to 78 years with a mean of 52 +/- 16 years). Their findings were compared with those of 16 patients with left ventricular aneurysms due to myocardial infarction. In only one patient was a diverticulum first detected by two-dimensional echocardiography before left ventriculography was performed. None of the patient had an associated midline thoracoabdominal defect. Five patients had premature ventricular beats, two of whom had ventricular tachycardia. Three patients complicated mitral valve prolapse and three atrial septal defect. Of the 20 patients, four each had two diverticula, as opposed to 16 others who each had a single diverticulum. The diameter of the diverticula ranged from eight to 70 mm. The sites of 14 diverticula were along the inferior wall; five in the anterior wall; four in the apex. Morphologically 15 diverticula were bulky outpouchings, six were tongue-like, and three hammocking. All diverticula exceeding 15 mm in diameter and originated near the mitral ring could always be detected in the short-axis view of two-dimensional echocardiography. However, those originating in the apex or of a tongue-like configuration could rarely by detected. Comparative two-dimensional echocardiographic analyses of 16 diverticula, 16 left ventricular aneurysms, and 16 normal left ventricular walls disclosed that the left ventricular aneurysmal wall had a higher echo intensity, but the diverticula had the same wall echo intensity as the normal left ventricular wall. Left ventricular end-diastolic wall thickness in an aneurysm (7.6 +/- 1.5 mm) was lower (p less than 0.01) than the normal left ventricular wall (11.1 +/- 1.3 mm), but it did not differ from the normal left ventricular wall in any case of diverticulum (10.2 +/- 1.5 mm). The percent wall thickening ratio in aneurysms (-3.6 +/- 10.7%) was lower (p less than 0.01) than the normal left ventricular wall (39.8 +/- 10.9%), but it did not differ from the normal left ventricular wall in diverticula (45.8 +/- 16.6%). Regional fractional shortening in the diverticula (41.3 +/- 9.2%) did not differ from that in the normal left ventricular wall (34.5 +/- 5.2%). In conclusion, a small diverticulum without a midline thoracoabdominal defect is not rare, and two-dimensional echocardiography is the diagnostic method of choice in many cases based on the echo features described above.
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